3 January 1831
adams-john10 Neal Millikan Family Finances (Adams Family)
77

3. VI. Monday. Sun rose 7:19.

Walk round the Capitol Square— Met Speaker Stevenson who is said to be sick, but there were no marks of it in his appearance. Writing at my Diary. Call at U.S. Branch Bank, and deposit of 105 received at U.S. Bank Philadelphia. At Mrs Freemans— Paid W. S. Smith by Check 75. returned him his receipt for 50. paid him by John last October, and took his receipt for 125 being his portion of the second distribution of proceeds of my father’s Estate as one of the Devisees under the Will. Mrs Smith had much politico-personal gossip— That Vice-President Calhoun, last Friday wrote a very short and crusty Note to President Jackson— That on New year’s day he did not visit at the President’s house; Nor Mr M’Duffie; and that Mr Calhoun had made application to Mrs Freeman for lodgings; which Mrs Freeman confirmed— She said Mr Virgil Maxcy, with whom she had no acquaintance came and introduced himself to her yesterday, and said he had come to enquire if she could accommodate Vice-President Calhoun with lodgings; but she had not room for him. Last Winter Calhoun lodged at Mrs Peyton’s. But H. L. White a Senator, and Polk and Lea, members of the House from Tennessee lodge there; and Mrs Smith infers that their Society is no longer acceptable to the Vice-President. The English Admiral Sir Isaac Coffin is lodging at Mrs Freeman’s, and has the gout in his hand. I asked to see him, but they had just sat down to dinner— In the Evening I went with Mr W. C. Greenleaf to the Capitol, and in the Hall of the House of Representatives, heard part of a Lecture by Noah Webster upon the English Language. We were late and heard not more than a third part of the discourse— His pitch of voice was too low to be heard in that Hall. His subject was pronunciation and orthoëpy; and the object of his Lecture was to shew the expediency that the term of copy-right for Books should be further extended by an Act of Congress— He said that one of the Members of Parliament who were here in 1824. and 1825. Denniston, Stanley and Labouchere had said he never heard of John Walker till he came to America. Mr Webster said that the last English writer upon this subject was Jameson.

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Citation

John Quincy Adams, , , The John Quincy Adams Digital Diary, published in the Primary Source Cooperative at the Massachusetts Historical Society: